1886
All rights reserved
CONTENTS
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| I. | Triangular Friendship | [1] |
| II. | Poker Talk | [11] |
| III. | Has He a Wife? | [32] |
| IV. | A Trinity Ball | [43] |
| V. | Marjorie | [58] |
| VI. | Two in Arcadia | [71] |
| VII. | On the Brink of a Flirtation | [82] |
| VIII. | Cross-stitch | [89] |
| IX. | Half Way towards Little Go | [99] |
| X. | ‘They say——’ | [108] |
| XI. | ‘Dodo’s Despair’ | [115] |
| XII. | Yellow-backed Novels | [123] |
| XIII. | Through Smoke-coloured Spectacles | [135] |
| XIV. | Brought up by the Jesuits | [143] |
| XV. | A Love-letter | [158] |
| XVI. | A Rash Resolve | [166] |
| XVII. | The First Crumpled Rose-leaf | [172] |
| XVIII. | How Dinah said ‘Yes’ | [178] |
| XIX. | Gaston Arbuthnot’s Philosophy | [194] |
| XX. | ‘James Lee’s Wife’ | [204] |
| XXI. | ‘Is my Virgil Passable?’ | [212] |
| XXII. | Linda as an Art Critic | [218] |
| XXIII. | A Swagger and a Sword | [227] |
| XXIV. | Rex Basire’s Humour | [238] |
| XXV. | You—and I! | [244] |
| XXVI. | Cut and Thrust | [252] |
| XXVII. | Growing old Gracefully | [261] |
| XXVIII. | For Auld Lang Syne | [275] |
| XXIX. | Missing | [282] |
| XXX. | Linda warms to her Part | [290] |
| XXXI. | Wife and Husband | [300] |
| XXXII. | Rose-water Socialism | [312] |
| XXXIII. | Close to Port | [320] |
| XXXIV. | Dead Rose Petals | [325] |
| XXXV. | A Traitress | [334] |
| XXXVI. | The Last of Arcadia | [341] |
| XXXVII. | A Stone for Bread | [347] |
| XXXVIII. | Temptation | [362] |
| XXXIX. | That Little Divinity | [379] |
| XL. | At the Bungalow | [389] |
| XLI. | One Word | [399] |
| XLII. | Emancipation | [407] |
| XLIII. | Geoffrey calls to be paid | [416] |
| XLIV. | Kismet | [428] |
| XLV. | Labelled and Corded | [438] |
| XLVI. | A Bye-term Man | [444] |
| XLVII. | Beside the Cradle | [454] |
| XLVIII. | Happiness | [464] |
| XLIX. | From Dinah’s Hand | [475] |
A GIRTON GIRL